This document provides an overview of philosophy, including its meaning, origins, and methods. It discusses:
- Philosophy aims to make sense of life and address fundamental questions about existence, reality, knowledge, and values. It originated in ancient Greece with thinkers like Thales who sought rational explanations for the universe.
- Philosophy can be defined popularly as one's worldview or attitude toward life, and etymologically as the love of wisdom. Formally, it is a discipline that studies ultimate causes, principles, and the general nature of reality through reason alone.
- Modern Western philosophy began with Descartes' systematic doubt and empirical reasoning to establish certainty in knowledge, the self, God, and the world. This
This document provides an overview of philosophy, including its meaning, origins, and methods. It discusses:
- Philosophy aims to make sense of life and address fundamental questions about existence, reality, knowledge, and values. It originated in ancient Greece with thinkers like Thales who sought rational explanations for the universe.
- Philosophy can be defined popularly as one's worldview or attitude toward life, and etymologically as the love of wisdom. Formally, it is a discipline that studies ultimate causes, principles, and the general nature of reality through reason alone.
- Modern Western philosophy began with Descartes' systematic doubt and empirical reasoning to establish certainty in knowledge, the self, God, and the world. This
This document provides an overview of philosophy, including its meaning, origins, and methods. It discusses:
- Philosophy aims to make sense of life and address fundamental questions about existence, reality, knowledge, and values. It originated in ancient Greece with thinkers like Thales who sought rational explanations for the universe.
- Philosophy can be defined popularly as one's worldview or attitude toward life, and etymologically as the love of wisdom. Formally, it is a discipline that studies ultimate causes, principles, and the general nature of reality through reason alone.
- Modern Western philosophy began with Descartes' systematic doubt and empirical reasoning to establish certainty in knowledge, the self, God, and the world. This
This document provides an overview of philosophy, including its meaning, origins, and methods. It discusses:
- Philosophy aims to make sense of life and address fundamental questions about existence, reality, knowledge, and values. It originated in ancient Greece with thinkers like Thales who sought rational explanations for the universe.
- Philosophy can be defined popularly as one's worldview or attitude toward life, and etymologically as the love of wisdom. Formally, it is a discipline that studies ultimate causes, principles, and the general nature of reality through reason alone.
- Modern Western philosophy began with Descartes' systematic doubt and empirical reasoning to establish certainty in knowledge, the self, God, and the world. This
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PHILOSOPHY: ITS MEANING,
METHODS, SCOPE, AND RELEVANCE
INTRODUCTION: The subject matter of Philosophy is diverse in its interest as it is comprehensive in its scope and coverage. As a field of human interest, Philosophy covers the whole of life. It is driven first by the need and desire to make sense of our everyday life and surroundings and this forms the basis for further higher academic and intellectual investigations, analyses and interpretation of complex problems and concerns of life with a view to resolving or at least having a better understanding of the problems and issues. For instance, we are all concerned with everyday issues of how best to relate to our parents, other members of our community and society at large; we are concerned with what duties (if any) we owe to ourselves, to other fellow human beings, to animals and to our environment. We are all committed to the pursuit of the ‘good life’ (whatever that means to us); which is why we are, for example, pursuing a university education in order to attain the ‘good life’. Our interest may also be drawn to existential and life’s troubling issues such as poverty, disease, hunger and suffering, crime, punishment and justice, abortion, suicide, corruption and good governance etc. • Beyond these, we may also be consciously or unconsciously concerned with fundamental issues like our origin and our destiny as human beings as well as the origin, nature and destiny of the world in which we live. One may pause to ask, why the interest in these issues? Well, the answer lies in our nature as humans because, unlike other animals that have really no care beyond their biological needs, Man, being a rational being is curious and filled with the desire to know, to decipher and to understand. The Philosophical underpinning to all these has remained man’s eternal quest for meaning, purpose, order and direction in life. This indeed, is the essence of the subject matter of philosophy. MEANING OF PHILOSOPHY.
The meaning or definition of Philosophy varies depending on the perspective of the
person defining it. However, the search for meaning, purpose, order and direction in life underscores the meaning of Philosophy. We examine the different definitions of the subject under the popular, etymological, and formal/academic categories. The Popular meaning: In the ordinary sense, the term ‘philosophy’ simply refers to at least one of two things: (i) Our attitude to life and ( ii) Our world view. • Attitude to life here simply means the general pattern or the habitual way we, as individuals or as groups respond to events or issues. • In this sense ‘philosophy’ is seen as a system of principles for guidance in practical affairs or a system a person forms for conduct of life. An attitude for example, of rationality, patience, composure and calm in the presence of troubles and annoyances. •World view: In a similar but somewhat more developed sense, ‘Philosophy’ is used to characterize a person’s (or group of person’s) expressed or observed ‘world view’ - depicting an overall perception and approach to life based on certain ideas, principles and values that motivate and explain a person’s choices and behavior. This ‘world view’ may be the sum total of the person’s assumptions, beliefs, attitudes and prejudices which are partly inherited and partly acquired in the process of living. A person’s world view simply depicts his frame of reference or general perspective in life. It is to either of these two that people refer to when they claim to have a ‘philosophy of life’. The two explanations above are termed as the ‘popular’ conception or what Jonas F. Soltis calls the ‘public’ sense of the meaning of philosophy A look at the origin of the word ‘Philosophy’ throws more light on the meaning, interest and concerns of the subject. Etymologically, the word ‘Philosophy’ is traced to two Greek words Philo (or Phileo) which means ‘Love’ and Sophia which means ‘Wisdom’. Thus literally, “Philosophia” from its root words translates to “ love for Wisdom”, “love of insight” or “love for knowledge and understanding”. ‘Love’ – a strong desire for a particular object. ‘Knowledge’ – the accumulation of facts, data or information that you have learned about or experienced. ‘Wisdom’ - the correct use or wise application of knowledge; the ability to discern or judge what is true, right or lasting; correct or wise decision about future action. ‘Philosophy’ in this sense therefore refer to the strong desire of a human person to possess knowledge as well as its correct or wise application. It is in the above sense that the ancient Greeks used the the term ‘Philosophy’. Indeed, the term was said to have been coined by Pythagoras of Croton who identified himself as a lover of wisdom, not particularly as wise man. Socrates the great Greek Philosopher was also reported to have considered himself not a wise man but one in search of wisdom. To the ancient Greeks among who was recorded high level of intellectual activities from about 500 BCE, the discipline of ‘Philosophy’ was characterized by the love for or pursuit of Knowledge/wisdom in all areas of speculative thought including the arts, sciences and religion - Philosophy was indeed, ‘the mother’ of all subjects ‘Falsafa’ the Arabic concept of Philosophy is also traced to the root words ‘Philosophia”. Indeed, the word is purely of Greek origin and the activities of the Falasifa (Philosophers) involved the Arabic translation of the classical Greek philosophical texts that dwell on the love/search for knowledge and wisdom on fundamental issues of life. • Thus, Islamic Philosophy (Falsafa al Islamiyya) accordingly, is explained as the systematic investigation of problems connected with life, the universe, ethics, society etc. from the Islamic perspectives ORIGIN OF WESTERN PHILOSOPHY Western Philosophy (which is the focus of this module) and indeed, the tradition of Western Scholarship as we know it today owes its roots to the ancient Greeks. While ancient Western Philosophical Inquiry was rooted in wonder and perplexity, modern Western Philosophy is rooted in doubt. Wonder as the origin of ancient Greek Philosophy: Philosophy in the West is said to have begun in the Greek colony of Miletus with Thales (640-562 BCE) who, in his desire to understand the nature of reality and the universe, was said to be the first to ask ‘What is the basic stuff of the universe from which all else come’? This question formed the foundation of western philosophical inquiry which spread outward to other thinkers of that era like Anaximander, Heraclitus and Empedocles to reach its heights in the works of scholars like Plato and Aristotle. • As a thinker and enquirer into the nature of reality, Thales offered a view of what governed the universe itself. • For him, the basic matter or underlining arche (principle) which was essential to all things was Water. Therefore to him, everything in the Universe at its most fundamental was made up of water. • This explanation of the nature of the universe by Thales was revolutionary in the sense that it was the first attempt to give a rational, not a mythological explanation of the nature of reality . • In his method of investigation, Thales attempted to be systematic and applied the same general principles to formulate a rational account of the Universe. This approach was to lay the foundation for rational and systematic inquiry into the nature of reality in the western Philosophical tradition. Doubt as the basis of modern western Philosophical inquiry: • Modern Western Philosophy sprang from doubt. The French Philosopher Rene Descartes, regarded as the father of modern western philosophy started with doubt. Sense-perception he argued, may be illusionary; reason may be so constituted that it may lead to error; authority is unreliable- • So, experience, reason and authority or tradition are doubtful but, the fact of doubting is undoubted. To doubt is to think, to think is to exist, hence his famous statement: ‘I think, therefore I exist’ or ‘cogito ergo sum’ (in Latin) • Therefore, the existence of the self is undoubted. • There is the innate idea of God in mind, therefore God must exist – He must be the author of the innate idea of God, the infinite, eternal, truthful and perfect Being. • Descartes argues that we have clear and distinct ideas of material things, therefore they exist. If they did not exist, their distinct ideas would be false and God would be untruthful. • Thus, Descartes started with universal doubt, proved the existence of self, God and the world and removed the original and provisional doubt. Hence the element of doubt or skepticism in the tradition of western philosophical inquiry, the essence of which is to establish a rational and firmer grounds for belief. DEFINITION OF FORMAL PHILOSOPHY •Formal definition of Philosophy: Beyond the popular and etymological meaning explained above, Philosophy can be described as a specialized activity or undertaking to which scholars called philosophers devote time and energy in its pursuit. •As a formal discipline, Philosophy has been variously defined by scholars and the varying definitions reflects the different perspectives of the authors on the diverse nature of the subject. We take samples of the various definitions of formal Philosophy as follows: Philosophy as: “The science that studies beings in their ultimate causes and principles through the aid of human reason alone” In other words, Philosophy is that subject concerned with the effort to understand the reason and principles that account for everything that exist. ‘Philosophy as ‘the study of the general and fundamental nature of reality, existence, knowledge, values, reason, mind and language.” ‘Philosophy’ as ‘rigorous, disciplined and guarded analysis of some of the most difficult problems of life’ -Henderson
‘Philosophy’ as “the thinking really hard about the most important
questions and trying to bring analytic clarity both to the questions and answers” -Marylyn Adams ‘Philosophy” as the “study that seeks to understand the mysteries of existence and reality. It tries to discover the nature of truth and knowledge and to find what is of basic value and importance in life”. It also examines the relationship between humanity and nature and between the individual and society …. Philosophy arises out of wonder, curiosity and the desire to know and understand… Aristotle, one of the foremost ancient Greek Philosophers begins his Metaphysics with the affirmation that all men by nature desire to know- “this natural addiction of the human mind to know the truth is the driving force behind philosophy” In this regards, Aristotle refers to philosophy as “the knowledge of truth”. “All things in life are philosophical- when one is to imagine life without thought or knowledge, they are left to only imagine the oblivion they would be left to reside in”. -Aristotle
‘Philosophy’ as the “Discipline in which questions are more
important than answers because answers themselves will in turn become more questions” - Karl Jaspers ‘Philosophy’ as ‘an attempt at working out some general, systematic, coherent and consistent picture of all we know and think about’. ‘Philosophy’ as ‘an inquiry into the nature of Truth about the human person and the world around him’ ‘Philosophy’ as ‘a rational search for answers to the basic questions about the ultimate meaning of reality as a whole and human life in particular’
‘Philosophy’ as ‘rational (unbiased) inquiry into whatever is, in so far as it is’ –
i.e.an activity in criticality Philosophy as a method of reflective thinking and reasoned inquiry’ - Harold Titus (1964) ‘Philosophy’ - as “an investigation of the nature, causes or principles of reality, knowledge, or values based on logical reasoning rather than empirical observation” – American Heritage Dictionary.
‘Philosophy’ as “the study of the ultimate nature of existence, reality,
knowledge and goodness as discoverable by human reasoning alone” - Kernerman English Multilingual Dictionary ‘Philosophy’ as “the careful thought about fundamental nature of the world, the grounds for human knowledge and the evaluation of human conduct”. - The Philosophy pages. ‘Philosophy’ as “the rational search for answers to questions that arise when we reflect on human experiences”/Philosophy “as a rational search for answers to the basic questions about the ultimate meaning of reality as a whole and human life in particular”.- Omorege J.J. (2005)
Philosophy as “an activity people undertake when they seek to understand
fundamental truths about themselves, the world they live in and also their relationship to the world and to each another”. -The Dept. of Philosophy, Florida State University “Philosophy is critical thinking: trying to become aware of how one’s own thinking works. Of all the way in which one’s own thinking shapes the things one thinks about’ -Don Cupitt
“Philosophy is thinking critically on the way things are: That
includes reflecting critically on social, political and economic arrangements. It always intimates the possibility that things could be other than they are. And better. - Michael Sandel ‘Philosophy’ as “ a habit of mind or a body of rational knowledge that results from disciplined inquiry and that enables one to explain in a more or less profound way the sum of human experience “ -William James (1977) ‘Philosophy’ as an intellectual activity focusing on the analysis of language with a view to achieving clarity and consistency of thought and expression’ Thus, ‘Philosophy’ is “a battle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of language” - the philosopher’s task therefore, is to clarify the meaning of words. - Ludwig Wittgenstein, a 20thcentury Austrian Philosopher “Philosophy is the interpretation of the world in order to change it” -Karl Max -That Philosophers before his era only attempted to interpret the world, the essence in his view however, was to change it. “Philosophy is that which grasps its own era in thought” -Hegel All these definitions have one central theme - man’s eternal quest for meaning, purpose, order and direction in life through the use of reason.
What other ideas, themes or issues can you identify from the different definitions of formal Philosophy given above? PHILOSOPHY AS AN ACADEMIC DISCIPLINE
In addition to being a subject of formal interest by scholars across all
subject areas ranging from Mathematics to physics, to linguistics, Economics, Law etc. Philosophy is also taught as a specialized academic discipline just like other traditional subject areas. In this regard, Philosophy is seen as an academic activity focusing on specific areas of study and thus defined as: “the discipline concerned with questions of how one should live (Ethics), what sort of things exist and what is their essential nature (Metaphysics), what particularly counts as genuine Knowledge (Epistemology) and what are the correct principles of reasoning” (Logic) -Wikipedia • In addition to these traditional areas of inquiry, Philosophy is also taught as a body of ideas or ‘schools of thought’ such as Idealism, Realism, Pragmatism, Existentialism etc. reflecting products of philosophical inquiry and perspectives on life and issues generally. • The history and evolution of philosophical ideas through the ages is also taught as a component of the academic discipline of Philosophy Philosophical Methods Philosophy is a reflective activity that relies on the reflective methods. The reflective methods in philosophy include questioning, critical discussion, rational argument and systematic presentation. • In line with their definition of the subject, professional philosophers adopt two methods in doing philosophy; • ii) The first method involves a speculative approach in which issues are examined in a logical, consistent and systematic manner so as to arrive at conclusions that are sound, coherent and consistent in all their parts. To some, these theoretical conclusions or speculations are what philosophy is all about. •ii) To others who adopt the second approach however, it is not necessary to reach those conclusions before a person is said to be engaged in philosophy: it is still philosophy if the aim is to clarify and explain the language with which we express our ideas. • As F.W Garforth puts it, “to philosophize is to engage in strenuous activity of thought and to pursue it with no other aim than to satisfy the importunate questioning of the human mind”. • In the two approaches mentioned above, the common element is the use of reason or logical argument as their tool. • In this regards, Philosophy places absolute reliance on the use of logical reasoning; and by logical reasoning is meant examining every evidence in favor or against any claim, from a dispassionate and impartial point of view, exposing prejudices and biases in claims that are put forward and in general, giving every bit of evidence as much weight as it actually deserves. • As a process based on the first approach outlined above, the philosophical method usually begins when a philosopher examines his own beliefs and begins to doubt their validity. From his doubt questions emerge. Before answering the questions, the philosopher thoroughly analyzes it to ensure it is properly defined. This helps to narrow the path to the most precise answers. • Next, the Philosopher proposes possible answers to the questions and provides reasoned argument to support each one. •The arguments are then critiqued by other philosophers who may give rebuttals. Through this process of criticism, argument, rebuttal and affirmation known as dialectic, Philosophers attempt to prove the rationality of their beliefs and discover fundamental truths. • Skepticism (or doubt) as a philosophical tool: In its approach, Western philosophical methods in particular, emphasizes the tentative nature of whatever conclusions that may be arrived at on any issue. In this regards, it shares with modern science the belief that no conclusions are so absolute and certain as to be immune to further future corrections by new evidence. Again, as Garforth puts it, “there belongs to the very nature of philosophy a refusal to take for granted, an attitude of skepticism which regards no conclusion as final and every matter, however apparently closed, as opened to further question”. • Tied to skepticism is the use of questioning as a tool. As noted by Karl Jaspers ‘Philosophy is a discipline in which questions are more important than answers because answers themselves will in turn become more questions’ • Thus, the dual use of skepticism and questioning as philosophical tools is to enable us achieve clarify in our thoughts and the language with which we express our ideas and to remain open minded and willing to shift our positions in the light of new evidence. • In philosophy, questioning a deeply held belief or social practice sets one on the path of true understanding, and it is this understanding that leads to meaningful and personal change. A good philosopher recognizes the danger of accepting knowledge at face value. Social or scientific theories may be untested or contain personal bias, trusting them immediately could result in terrible consequences. • To summarize, Professional Philosophers adapt two approaches in doing philosophy based on their conception of the discipline : i) The first approach conceives Philosophy as a speculative and prescriptive activity in which one tries by means of reasoning to build up a coherent and consistent world-view or the ideal world that ought to be. Thus, Philosophy is both a process and a product; ii) The approach that sees Philosophy as an activity that should be confined to defining concepts, analysing and criticising statements and propositions with a view to achieving clarity and consistency of thought and expression. Philosophy in this sense is essentially seen as a process. In both approaches however, logical reasoning and healthy skepticism are common characteristics of engaging in the activity of philosophy. • For further reading see Akinpelu J.A (1981) An Introduction To Philosophy of Education; Macmillan Publishers